The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 236, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1964 Page: 2 of 6
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2 THl CITERO RECORD. Monday. Oct. 5, 1M4
Editorial
Our Best Friends
In Cucro we have a group of men who need psy-
chiatric help real bad - at least if you look at It from
a cold logical stand-point.
On the other hand, take a good look at the human-
side and you'll send them all on a round-the-world all-
expense paid boat trip. The only trouble would be. we
can’t be without them.
Can you imagine somebody doing these things.
—Leaving a warm bed on a cold or rainy night to
go chasing down the street?
■ ' '0*M
M'tiw MY SHADOW
.>■
ti-
Are you serious, Mr. Presi-
dent? Is it really true that
you’re determined to stamp out
poverty?
I’ve been waiting a long time
for someone Mke you to say i
that. Up to now, it seems that
politicians have been more in-
terested in creating poverty,
than in getting rid of it.
You’ll forgive me if I'm a
_____ me
rinsintf ud the place of business at any hour of | ntuo skeptical - after all.
the day!°any day of “he wee*, loaf to race down the we v, aeee.ved many pro
StTMt?
_Jump up from the dinner-table, TV or anything
else they might be enjoying Just to race down the
street?
mises in Ihe past. But you can
end my skepticism by answer-
ing a few simple questions that
will prove you're serious about!
ending our poverty:
1. Are you going to put a
—Crawling among muddy, dirt, charred hutldinga|
erican family about $75 per
8
A
p
with good clothes on?
—Risking their lives each time a horn sounds?
—Spending hours, too numerous to mention, in
training to be more efficient and then not getting
enough pay to talk about?
We could go on and on but you know who we re
talking about . . . the Cuero Volunteer Fire Department.
It goes without question that from a logical point
of view these men are in a bad way. The average man
wouldn’t volunteer to do these things.
But our Cuero Department members do!
What’s more, the excellent reputation these men
have made for themselves has resulted in a long wait-
ing list of quality citizens seeking entry into this life of
service with little pay.
Each of these men is Interested In one thing. Other-
wise he wouldn’t be a volunteer firemen. This thing Is
people.
When he gets the nod to enter the department, he
takes on a grave responsibility. Weekly drills, annual
training periods and special training from time to time.
All of this is time consuming; time he could be spending
with his loved ones.
But the volunteer fireman is interested In what he
can do for us; not what we can do for him.
Where else will you find individuals who spend so
much time preparing for a job and hope they'll never
be called on? ...........- ----
We doubt our firemen like to hear the fire horn‘minimum wage.
- . * fripnri of a " You didn’t declare war oi
sound. They know that some friend or a friend of *|communigrn only IX)Verty
friend is now about to lose everything unless the volun- j,,st |,y rei-minating govern _____________________
teers respond quickly. With this motivation our volun- j meni aid to the Soviets, you "'SEiTfeWr •* j
, ... . , at eppne of a bla/e rould alleviate our poverty and) irtrk #ms. i* • sjr-1
teers are faster than fast. They re at the scene oi a bu e ^ good hanl Wmv at tho j wiirjbiw *» b. n<u*
ahead of most departments. . communist* at the same time. j <br » turpi. io«» Blueprint* ot
These men are our best friends. These men, though Y<,u know what I mean - such i ttSU
. ,, t nf _11P bt~ | things as our guaranteeing the | tn- drop on aa ■wnjinnt,
we may not know all of them, comprise one of out big cmljt on t)ie wheat sa]e aj<j bnj Murdock win k«re wnd-
gest protection force in Cuero and DeWitt County. These
men, friends all, make it possible for you and I to sleep
restfully and know that should a fire break out some-
body will be ready to try to help us.
On this, National Fire prevention Week, we take off
our editorial hat to a group of men who can never be
paid enough; never commended enough.
year?
2. And are you going to atop
the absurd government farm
program — which I figure
run* my family about $150 ev-
ery year?
3. And If you’re honest about j
this, I assume that you’ll re-:
turn to all citizen* the right to i
own gold, which the politician*
stole from us 30 years ago. If
so. we’ll be protected from be-
ing poverty-stricken by dishon-:
e*t government inflationary
policies.
4. And how about this prac-1
tice of everybody paying every-1
body else’s light bill? You’ll
end that, won’t you?
5. Oh yes. I’m also concern-
ed about those 19,000 losing;
commercial enterprises the De-|
fense Department operates. 1
suppose you'll sell them to pri-
vate enterprise and enable the
defense budget to be cut dras-
tically, won’t you?
6. You mentioned curing un-
employment, too. Does that
mean you intend to terminate
federal programs that cause
people to be coercively unem-
ployed? You know, the mini-
mum wage law keeps a lot of
people out of work, who could
i ot her\vise earn less than the
*
j|Wi
Dtu&U
WASHINGTON^
MARCH OF EVENTS
T* la great*
A lT-font high
*t atnt
Bins Wist
By FRANK WYNNE
Sir surssMMtr
WHAT US* warrrvr* Idlebags and spread his copy of brings von out this way sport?
I n»l Cbaac* h»d mouatam*. river*, j L^,in* # map out oo the I "1 thought I'd give the men
Pfril-SW^SSlM d$P» ! ground. After studying the map. | on the Bridge crew . httle moral
bitter eae-
toone. CMrigr.1
he took his surveying tools to support.
■he said. "Besides, I
the Brink of the pass end set ] want to see how the job is
up the tnpod. He took a sight | coming along. And don t cal)
on a distant mountain peak and!me sport, you big bull.’ »
h.s entr«pp^_Ch.Bce * chic I „.a,i. that fell name ”
coat end With *» supertateadeat
roastruetioa of th* sew railroad
from Camp In (If pendente to Arrow-
head. Arizona for Colonel Erernignt.
He alto bad the vicious bara**-
meat of Owen Murdock,
mv of Eteraight.
Murdock’* hired
Violet sad
kill “
Election Projections
, credit on the wheat sale, aid
to Poland t which is shipped on
to North Vietnam \ arming the
Yugoslavians nnd so forth.
When I read the history’ books,
I fail to find any mention of
large-scale poverty in the last
century. At that time, we didn’t
have all these "modem’’ feder-
al innovations. And yet the
rate of progres* and growth
from one year to the nexl was
a great deal larger lhan wbat
we have now.
Instant communication is the trademark of today's 'ou knt*v’ Mr- President,
insuini luiiiiiiumcouu , there * only one cause of pov-
iews media. ierty-too much government.
Television and radio stations, in particular, fight ill’s the tame all over the
feverishly to be first with the latest break in any
story. as they see fit, the economy
That’s particularly true In the case of elections. No ^ naturally breaks down. Neither
longer content to merely report the outcome of balloting j ^^°‘ai*ny divS'br-coSnpetInt
is quickly as possible they have resorted to a “projec- t0 nln p,e jjv« 0f 190 millions,
[ions” gimmick which forecasts results as certainties You needn't feel inferior; it
alter only a smattering sample of the votes have been1
! ry is a truly free
would forbid one in which the
^.•.f-r** bu"CbrilIiMt downhill between walls that fell name
Curt Les*«ng. The railhead * chief a,vav to either side. "I'H bear it in mind, he said
aalooa and eambltaa bou** opera- •; . . _ . The girls look turned sober
tor. Joe) Oat si* a. 7* purposefully What tie found out made him i , , *
denioriliiias some of cfia.ee . b**f together i ”1 wish you wouldn t be makm
ire Ir-layers and bridfe-buijdej a flench hi. lips tog , ' fun of me all the time." she
He packed th* equipment i gald (ap!„ng int0 the thickness
tt the| eonai problem of Phil * a* be ri«ee;aw*y and walked downslo e to brogue. It was an uncon-
auchi the railroad (rradiB*-an<i i» am- prosehes to the pas* in ,w0 w(rn of troubled emotions. It
...........- ho..rs he walked about six mile*;hirn remwntt4.r w, u*t
over the rugged country. m*»<-! sli.ht of her a fp,w nig,hta ag0,
ing . rough circle and ending | ,|im and pretty
up back with hi* horse. He tronl ol her father* t*"f
bent down over th. map ■n'llthou|,h ^he were crying.
1 frowned, tracing sever.I course* ( ^ lhoutM made hl
timlned when Phil Chance n.jth bia finger. And when he
stood up, coiling the map, he
wros certain there wa. only one
way to run rail* through Hay.
Pass.
TtoZriZZX i wn'uwim
By HENRY CATHCART
Central Press Washington Writer
TT’’A sHIXGTOX—President-choosing aesson b*twreen convex-
W tlons and election la * good tim* to reoognliio that
tou* memorial, are under construction now
capital, honoring another President- Theodor.
is . granite memorial and bronze statp* on Roo^«lt
Island and the other 1* * bridge acroeg th*
Potomac. . _ _ .,__
Walk along trail* on th* Potomac Island
and suddenly you com* upon *
wilderness. Near the center of thl* forested
island you find construction half computed on
the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial.
Th* public’* only acc*s* to tho laUM at
present is by boat. A small ferry cart** pe-
destrian* on weekend* from th* Georgetown
•Id* of th* Potomac. When a 400-foot p*d**-
trian bridge is completed from th* Virginia
.Si the ferry *411 care. Vehicle* of all kinds
will continue to be btrred from th*
TTit central attraction of tho momorlal will
be Y 17-foot bronze *Utu. of TR, his right
arm raised in on* of his famous gestures. His
statue will etand on it* pedestal in front of a
30-foot granite shaft. A 40-foot reflecting
them. It will contain two fountain*. Two *^*^* ^ ^*“
the moat. Two circular pools with ornamental fountains are
tnr built on two sides of the main reflecting pool.
• • * •
• STEPS WILL ENABLE pool-area visitors to walk to U* up-
per terrace. There among ornamental gardens *1U stand
foot granite slabs, or stales-ptllars bearing breertptUms. Vnriou.
.tatement. by the dynamic TR will be chUe^ to^ t^ gramu.
These inscription* *111 cover four main subjects.JNATORE
MANHOOD, YOUTH, and THE STATE. Here are examples of
TR’s words from each panel: __. „
NATURE: "Conservation means development as much ns it
does protection.” ^ . _____
MANHOOD: “Only those are fit to Hvo who do not fear to «*.
and non* are fit to die who have shrunk frem the Joy of Ilf* nnd
hYOUTH: "Courage, hard work, self-mastery, and intelligent
effort ere all essential to successful Ilf*. Alike for th*
th* individual, th* on* indispensable requisite la character._
THE STATE: ”A greet democracy has got to bo progressive
or it will soon ceast to be a great democracy.”
Theodor* Roosevelt Island Itself Is a living memorial to TR.
He used to hlk# there and swim In th* Potomac with his boys
when he was President. Th* Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Asso-
ciation acquired the island in 1*31. They transferred tt to th*
National Perk Service to maintain in honor of TR—on* of the
nation a greatest conservationists. Numerous tress were planted
and for 30 years wildlife nnd wilderness havs davelopad.
• ‘ • • •
• IN 1*5*. the centennial of TR’a birth, the island was formally
dedicated a* a living memorial to him. Invited
guests sat beneath big oaks near the island* Rifhts Ml
southern end. Downstream and across the Po-
tomac they saw the Lincoln Memorial, the Wash-
ington Monument, the United States Capitol.
They knew this island once belonged to George
Mason, author of the Bill of Rights.
American* who *111 vote this year on# week after Oct. Tl,
anniversary of Theodora Roosevelt's birth—a year marked b>
assassination, riots, strikes, and Intrigue* against liberty—may
well remember this admonition from TH that will aUo be in*
scribed in granite at hi» new memorial: "Our* U a government
of liberty by, through and under the law.”
Owned Island
for paver- j
aunted. I ty is a truly free economy —
Senator Winston L. Prooty (R Vt.) would f«Ud ~ STSTSI
Irlng of either projections or results In one part of the,ua .■poverty.itrtcken" individu-
nuntry before polls have closed In another section, where, ais win be free to solve our
national race is involved lwn Probtem* There are thou'1
national race is mvoivea. japnd* of enterprising business-
A case in point is the 1960 election, when early pro- j men waiting to help us
>ctlons showed President Kennedy winning in a land- i raise our standard of living-as \
ide. whereas his final margin was a mere 112,000 votes. «- 1
nd these projections were aired before the poles had ^em
iosed in California.
OJfyr (Euprn Sernrli
Established In ISM
Published Each Afternoon Excepl Satnrda? aad
Sunday Morning _
How about it, Mr. Presi-
dent? Are you really serious
about getting rid of poverty?
By THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO.
119 C. Male Cuero. Texae
Second class postage paid at Cuero. Texas
1964_
RESS ASSOCIATION
South Texas Preas Aaaoclatlon
Southern Newspaper Publishers Aa»ociat1on
iCK HOWERTON - —
C “PETE’’ HOWERTON
RS JACK HOWERTON -
WEST H. JENNES......—
President and PubUsne<
^_____ Vtoa Praatdem
_ Sacretarv-Treaauiet
_________Managing Editor
rvatlinal Advert!stag r________
Texas Daily Preas League Inc.. 960 Hartford Bldg.,
dubacrlpttoa Bata*
Dalit*
By United Pre»a International
| Todav is Monday. October 5.
the 279th day of 1964 with 871
to follow.
Tlie moon is new .
j, The morning stars are Jupi-
ter. Mars and Venus.
The evening star is Saturn,
On this day in history:
In 1918. the alfie* smashed 1
Germany's Hindenburg line'
and the end of World War I ap-!
preached.
In 1921. Grantland Rice was j
at the microphone as the World j
Series was broadcast for tlie
first time. j ------
In 1931, aviators Clyde Pang- Pryor. 20,
bom and Hugh Herndon Jr.;
CHAPTER IS
QNLY an hour# daylight re
j finished tying a little croe* u>-
Igether over th* mounded grave
of Jack Stobo. Chance mounted
the dun and took the dead men’s
rifle with him. Leading Stobo a
borae. tie moved out through
the coolneae of the pinea, heed-
ing for Hay* P*»*.
It wa* after dark before be
reached th* pees He traveled
■lowly, studying the terrain aa
be went He thought back with-
out warmth. Stobo’a waa th#
second attempt to be made on
ihia life in forty-eight hour#—or
the third, If he counted Dwight
Violet’s hand-to-hand attack.
He had enemies, all right;
that was certain. Owen Mur-
dock headed the Hat but be
should not forget Joel Oatman.
who had rankled at bia warn-
ing—and even Lena Murdock,
whom ha had rebuffed. Lena
waa a high-strung and arrogant
woman and it might not be be-
vond her to hire a killing done,
in a fit of jealous anger
When he reached Hay* Pass
he spread out two saddle blan-
kets after picketing the two
Horse* and making a spare sup-
per. He lay looking up at the
stars, smoking a cigarette
through, and afterward* scoop-
ed out depression* in the earth
for hip and shoulder before be
dropped off to sleep.
He awakened once la the
night to li*ten to the call of a
wolf acroa# the mountain*: the
next time he came awake, it
waa to greet the reflected light
of the d*wn sun on the far wall
It would have to be a tunnel
It took him the rest of the
morning to ride down the long
slope to th* Smoke River. Here
he found a hive of activity.
Hugh O'Reilly had a busy crew
slinging the strong wooden
trestle aero** th# river. They
The thought made him feel
more tender toward her and h#
said. “You look mighty pretty
today with that bow in your
hair.'”
"P.ed hair always looks snart
with a green bow,” she said
dogmatically. “And 1 thank you
for your flattery. Philip." Her
glance traveled out acrose th#
Hat land, glittering with mica
particles and pvrites. She said
softly, “Maybe If it wasn’t Tor
these darned freckles >#"
*» V \
.»
must have sunk their P‘,,n"s ’ vvotitcln’t fool with me so much,
yesterday, for today the skele-. ..j tjl{e your fr<H-kles.“ hs
ton of the trestle was .lr«ady • anBwere€,. ..Don t grow such a
partially complete.
~Oood work." Chance said j
“Damned good. O'Reilly.’'
• • •
'REILLY 3 broad Irish
"1 like
answered,
liong face.’
She flared up. ‘There you go
j again. Do you always have to
' treat me like a child ?’”
_________________ gnr j -Relax.'’ he said. "You ve got
answered him. and Chance something on your mind, sport,
rode on, leaving the extra horse j Want to take it out and let ue
behind where It could he used j both have a look at it?"
to drag timbers. Eight or nine] "There,” she said. "You did
Mai Maimer
—Those TV
commercials!
O'
heavy freight wagons a a t
around behind their strung-out
mule teams, and part of the
crew wa* busy unloading ma-
terial. He went on across the
flat*, seeing in the distance the
lift of emoke and dust where
the railhead was racing for-
ward toward the bridge.
A rider appeared on a ground-
swell a mile distant and came
trotting toward him. Made wary
by the past few days' experi-
ence. Chance lifted the rifle
from hia saddle-boot and laid it
across his pommel, thumb across
the hammer. Jack Stobo * rifle,
he thought wryly.
The r,der advanced and pres- all
emerged
it again "
“Did what?”
“You called me sport."
"I’m sorry.”
“And,” she said, “as for
what’s on my mind, why if it's
all the same to you I think I’ll
just keep it to myself. If you
don’t mind ”
“All right,” he said mildly.
"That’s a pretty horse ” she
told him. "Where’d you get it?’’
"In Arrowhead.”
"My.” she observed, “you
surely do travel around, don’t
you?” Then she leaned for-
ward earnestly, both hands or
the saddle horn Her voire lost
of its previous bantering
.. ... previous
entlv emerged from her own tone She said. "Phil be care
of the gorge. X'ow, with day-1dust-cloud: Eileen Magruder 1 ful. Talk s going around that
light, he looked down along the Pert and redheaded, she drew you re a target "
crazy loop# and awitcliback* of rein beside him and watched I "For whose gun ?”
the steeply descending stage- curiously as he put his rifle "1 don t know." she said "But
coach road, and shook his head away. "What s that for?” sheets no seciet that Oven Mur
glumlv. inquired. dock doesn t want this contract
He took out the compass ajid, "Tou look like a tough cus .fulfilled '
surveyor's level from his sad- tomer, ‘ he said grinning. '’Whet1 (To Be Continue* Tomorrowt
RroiB th* aovel publifbed r>y Avaion Bocks. C Copyright tSM. by Brian Garfield.
Distributed by Kin* Feature* Syndicate.
tlhv A Sunday: Horn* delivered by carrier. One Year
: month* $6.25, 3 months $3-25. 1 month $1.10. By mail ir
Win. Victoria. Goliad. Karnas, Contain, Lavaca and Jackseo
unties, oo* year $8.50. Six months $4.50. on# month 75c. Bv
til elsewhere in Texas, One Year $10-00, six months $5.50 i
>mh $1 00 Bv Mail outside Texas, On* Year $12.00 « month,
25. 3 months $3.25. I month $1.10. temMVeehly Edition*. Hv
til in DeWitt and adjoining counties. One Year $4.00, 6 month*
25. Elsewhere. One Year $4.50. 6 months $2.50.
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and County of DeWttf
TELEPHONE CR G-SUR
Not Learning
CLEVELAND (UPI)-
a college
i him for Ignoring a traffic vio AIRIJNE SCHOOL EXPANDS
i lation Aug. 24. Pryor said he FORT WORTH (UPI) — A
I was studying law enforcement $600,000 expansion program for
Ortise in American Airlines’ stewardess
student] ' ____ j college will begin in December.
increase the school's
m^eTi «rriflrJIsteM!i£;^ | eap^chy from 750 to 1.000 girls
Supports Coldwater
Cleveland policemen for bribery,
was semerived to 15 day* in the
workliuusc.
Prvor was arrested for driving
GENEVA (UPI i -Hank Ket- 75 mile* pet hour in a 35
cham. creator of tire cartoon j m.p.h. zone. It
strip "Dennis the Menace,” an- traffic arrest, four of iJiem for
nounceil he was fomiinu a! speeding.
"Goldwater for President" mov-' Two patrolmen were indi,cted
enient in Switzerland. Ketcham for briber; after Pis or coni-
ine* in Geneva. I plained they solicited $25 from
UOIt RESULTS
per year.
HANOT SUBSCRIPTION COUPON - CUP AND MAIL
CUERO RECORD Cuero Texas
Please enter my subscription to one 0 CUERO DAILY
_____ ... _ „ RECORD or D the SEMI-WEEKLY RECORD Mai) papar and
was his eighih subscription •tatement to:
N’arne .............................................-.....................................................
City oi P.te, C:.....................................................^--------------—
□ This is a renewal ordei.
O I am not now a RECORD subscriber.
bee Rate schedule below Editorial column oi thu page.
BY MEl HEIMER
ta TEW YORK—A couple of year# ago I broke
i\ the gadget that enabled me to ahut off
the sound of the TV while lying in bed, which
any normal citizen would do when the com-
mercials are on. Thus, 1 am now reduced to
■hutting my eyes throughout the commercials,
although I still im attacked by the booming
voice-over
I have been wondering today what the peo-
ple who make the 30. 60 or 90-second adver-
tising gobbledegooks for TV think of people
such as me. Particularly when a commercial
can cost anywhere up to $50,000.
Th* other day I s»w an ad-agency crew
•tart out for Central Park to begin the mak-
ing of auch a commercial, and I got to think-
ing about the time and travail—the ridiculous travail, I suppose
—that go into such a project. To begin with. It often takes from
one to two hundred persons, sprinkled over a few states, to turn
It out. The filming alone, aside from the ad people's salaries, etc,
can cost up to oh, say, $30,000.
The majority of the problems, however, are seemingly minute
and foolish. For Instance, you'd be startled et the time and
thought that go into the selection of. for Instance, a man and a
girl to do a romantic-type commercial together. Dozens of candi-
dates will be screened. The man has to look tall but not too tall,
and the girl must look right with him. If there s a blue back-
drop, thev must have brown eyes, so they don't *eem to have
holes in the head. Will their hands show’? Then they must b#
nice hands Are we going on location without a hairdresser? Th#
girl haa to be able to do her own hair.
NOT TOO LONG AGO THE J. WALTER THOMPSON
agency was putting together an auto commercial and its entire
fashion department dug deep into the headache of getting the
right riding-habit costumes for the principals ($1,000 allotted for
two rostumes). The department concentrated on details more
carefully than Hollywood; the matter of which one of seven
jackets the man should wear waa a monumental task.
since a great many—the bulk. I suppose—commercials are
shot here in New York, the. shall we say. uncertain weather can
louse up everything. One agency waa trying to film some cloud
formations last spring-big. puffy clouds—and for weeks, they
got nothing but clear pale blue sky or rain and overcast. It
finally ended up ordering 200 feet of cirrua-cumulua from a film
library at $9 a foot.
The unions invariably have their fingers in the pie and can up-
set things. For example, a filming crew which can run Into th#
dozens, haa a choice of eating luncheon on the eet or at a nearby
restaurant—and If they go "out” to eat, production la bald up *o
much longer.
• • •
THE MOST DISHEARTENING ITEM, I SUPPOSE, IS
when the rough cut of the filmed commercial is *ere*a*d, and
somebody discover* that th* light wasn't quit* right, becaua#
the hero's Jacket flapped in the breeze or »omething. Th«a they
take a deep breath and do It all over again. And you know all
that dreadful music that accompanies th* commercials? It
usually is recorded in a sound studio fit Manhattan, this venture
involving roughly a singer, a dozen aouls in the control room, S4
or so musicians—and anywhere from one to two dosen record*
Inga.
A quality commercial can take from two to six week* to do—-
and another two to six weeks if the client, that la, th# adver-
tiser, says it’s rettan and ha wants it don* over. And then there
can be that horrible, sinking moment when th* commercial is
wrapped up beautifully and ready for release—and somebody
discovers that the girl In It already ha* DONE a deodorant com-
mercial for another firm, which she neglected to announce.
It's s fascinating, eerie, absurd business—and when the ere*,
linn is finished, guys lik* me rinse iheir ey»« during th# com-
mercial and wait patiently for the late mane to start up agaita
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Jennes, Ernest H. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 236, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1964, newspaper, October 5, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth698707/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.